Already hailed as ‘intricate and compelling’ by the Times Literary Supplement, The Sandglass is a striking novel by Sri Lankan author Romesh Gunesekera, a 1994 Booker Prize finalist for his first novel, Reef.
Set in London where the Sri Lankan narrator lives, The Sandglass tells the story of two feuding families whose lives are interlinked by the changing fortunes of postcolonial Sri Lanka. In a beautifully constructed work that moves back and forth between two physical and temporal poles, Gunesekera brings to life Prins Ducal and his search for answers about his family’s past in Sri Lanka, including his father’s rise to wealth, rivalry with the Vatunas family, and a suspect death—a mystery that further unfolds upon Prins’s arrival in London for his mother’s funeral.
Weaving together themes of memory, exile, and postcolonial upheaval, Gunesekera has written a book Marie Claire calls ‘utterly engaging. . . . Romantic, mysterious, and laced with a sense of yearning. . . . A heady mix of 1990s London and postwar Sri Lanka.’
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Romesh Gunesekera is the author of
Monkfish Moon,
Reef,
The Sandglass,
The Match, and
Noontide Toll (all published by The New Press). He grew up in Sri Lanka and the Philippines and now lives in London.